
Nicholas John Albert, Lord Fairfax of Cameron, and his consort, Annabel, Lady Fairfax of Cameron, like Fairfax County very much, thank you. However, at tea at Woodlawn Plantation, they would not admit to a plot to reclaim his ancestral 5.3 million acres.
I might be able to claim the title of Lord Fairfax. Oh heck! You only live once! I hereby claim the title of Lord Fairfax – and my families lands in the New World!
John Gregory Presco
July 15, 2018
http://www.culpepperconnections.com/ss/ac8512.htm
http://www.culpepperconnections.com/ss/p8495.htm
I believe Cazelet knew what I have discovered in the last few days. I suspect Cazalet was a great genealogist. JANE LEE is the key. She is kin to JOYCE LEIGH Culpeper. I wondered if Robert E. LEE is related. The Culpepers lost a vast track of land in Virginia, due to the Revolution. However, the British title, Lord Fairfax of Cameron, has recently been revived. Robert E. Lee’s family had deep roots in Virginia. I suspect a sham confiscation. I believe Britain played a big clandestine role in the Civil War. I suspect President Trump is a Russian agent, and, a agent of a Neo-Confederate Treachery that Jeff Sessions is a member of. Jeff spent time in Russia as a Christian Missionary. Some Southern Republicans are trying to Impeach Rosenstein. Where is Sessions? No one is talking about him. Trump is playing him like an ace up his sleeve.
WAKE UP – and believe the worst possible scenario is about to occur. Britain is about to fall. I have called on Rena Easton who was married to Admiral Ian Easton who was head of the British Defence Staff. Four years ago I began a painting of Rena as Rosamond Clifford who was kept in a Labyrinth. When I beheld the maze at Arrenton, on the Isle of Wight where the Easton’s lived, I knew I was being given a powerful message. When Rosenstein called for UNITY I though about Ben Toney and Jimmy Rosamond, who are friendly towards the People of the South.
John Presco
British Defence Staff

Rena’s ex-husband was in charge of keeping Britain and the U.S. united. Trump has shattered this unity. Rena had a body like an Angel.
Jon
Irene (Rena) Victoria Easton
Posted on September 4, 2014by Royal Rosamond Press
Irene (Rena) Victoria Easton
Posted on September 4, 2014by Royal Rosamond Press
Rena’s late husband, Ian Easton, was the head of British Defense Staff in Washington that has been working behind the scenes, making sure British and American interests are aligned. Our President has to take in the anti-war movement in both nations as he prepares to battle a common enemy. Rena has a unique perspective in regards to the men she has bonded with. Her worldview is extremely important. But she is a recluse. I bid her to dig deep and bring forth her dream of a beautiful world, yet to be. If WE give up now, then all that is ugly in the world, has won the war before it has begun. We must seize the day, and make over the world in our best image, for it is on the brink of ruin. their town.
The British Defence Staff – US, which was previously known as British Defence Staff (Washington),[1] is the home of the Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom) in the United States of America and its purpose is to serve the interests of Her Majesty’s Government in the USA. The British Defence Staff – US is led by the Defence Attaché and has responsibility for military and civilian MOD personnel located both within the Embassy and in 34 states across the USA.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culpeper,_Virginia
Thus, it appears, that the lovers, Catherine and Thomas were 6th cousins, once removed.
It is believed by most Culpepper researchers that most American Culpeppers are descended from the Wigsell line, which started with Walter Culpeper of Calais and Wigsell.
Thus, the relationship of these American Culpeppers to Catherine Howard and Thomas Culpeper is as follows:
|
Thomas Culpepper is a first cousin, a dozen or more times removed, and |
|
|
Catherine Howard is a seventh cousin, a dozen or more times removed. |
Catherine’s ancestry as depicted in chart form in the Culpepper Family Tree
In 1525, it was leased by Abbot William Rippon to a parish landholder, John Leigh. The manor was rebuilt between 1595 and 1612. Charles I visited the manor several times. Sir Thomas Bennet added the new porch and oak panelling in the major rooms. The original manor house was far older, however. It is claimed that Queen Mary often visited Arreton Manor.
Arreton Manor was leased to several different farmers until 1628, when it was granted by the king to trustees to settle the king’s debts to the City of London. It was then bought by two merchants from the trustees. It was later bought by Thomas Colepeper, 2nd Baron Colepeper, Governor of the Isle of Wight. On Lord Culpeper’s death, his daughter Lady Katherine, acquired the property. Lady Katherine married Lord Fairfax and it stayed in the Fairfax family for 230 years. Its history then followed that of the island community, and the manor was farmed by the abbot’s steward till 1525, when it was leased by the last Abbot William Rippon to John Leigh, who already held land in the parish.[2] After the Dissolution, it was granted to various farmers by the Crown until 1628, when it was granted by the king by trustees for the payment of his debts to the City of London. The manor then followed the same descent as that of Newport to the Wykeham-Martin family, in whose hands it remained until the 20th century.[2] Queen Victoria supposedly planted a conifer on the manor’s south lawn.[3]
https://rosamondpress.com/2018/07/12/trumpmeister-honored-at-blenheim-labyrinth/
https://rosamondpress.com/2016/10/13/the-labyrinth-dance-of-the-fatal-girls/
https://rosamondpress.com/2013/02/20/rosamond-mistress-of-the-labyrinth/

Richard Lee, Sr.
| Gender: | Male |
|---|---|
| Birth: | before June 10, 1563 Coton Hall, Nordley Regis, Shropshire, England |
| Death: | 1621 Alveley Parish, Shropshire, England |
| Place of Burial: | Chesham, Buckinghamshire, , England |
| Immediate Family: | Son of Sir John Lee of Coton Hall and Joyce Lee Husband of Elizabeth Lee Father of Edward Lee; Willimus Lee, I; John Lee, Sr.; William Lee; Thomas Lee and 3 others Brother of William Lee of Coton Hall; Jasper Lee; Thomas Lee of Coton Hall; Gilbert Lee of Coton; Edward Lee and 2 others |
| Added by: | Brian Lee Battle on January 20, 2007 |
| Managed by: | Jacqueli Charlene Finley and 65 others |
| Curated by: | Maria Edmonds-Zediker, Volunteer Curator |
Charles I created the title in 1627 for Sir Thomas Fairfax. He had represented Queen Elizabeth I on several diplomatic missions to James VI of Scotland and also sat as a Member of Parliament for several constituencies in the English Parliament.
Both his son Ferdinando, the second Lord, and grandson, Thomas, the third Lord, served as prominent military commanders in the cause of Parliament during the Civil War. On the latter’s death in 1671 the title passed to his first cousin, the fourth Lord. He was the son of Reverend the Hon. Henry Fairfax, second son of the first Lord, and notably represented Yorkshire in the House of Commons. His son, the fifth Lord, sat as a Member of Parliament for Malton and Yorkshire.
He was succeeded by his son, the sixth Lord. He inherited substantial estates in Virginia through his mother, the daughter of Thomas Colepeper, 2nd Baron Colepeper, Governor of Virginia. On his death the title and American estates passed to his younger brother, the seventh Lord. He represented Maidstone and Kent in Parliament. The immense American estates were confiscated during the American War of Independence. He was succeeded by his first cousin once removed, the eighth Lord, Rev. Bryan Fairfax who also lived in Virginia. He was the grandson of Reverend the Hon. Henry Fairfax, second son of the fourth Lord. However, it wasn’t until 1800 that he was confirmed in the title by the House of Lords.
His great-great-grandson was Albert Kirby Fairfax, the twelfth Lord, who lived in Maryland in the United States. His branch of the family had lived in America for several generations and had essentially forgotten about the title. However, it was then discovered that Albert was the rightful heir to the lordship and in 1908 he was confirmed in the title by the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords. In 1917 he was elected a Scottish Representative Peer, which he remained until his death in 1939.
He was succeeded by his eldest son, the thirteenth Lord. He was a Scottish Representative Peer from 1945 to 1963 and served as a Lord-in-Waiting (government whip in the House of Lords) between 1954 and 1957 in the Conservative administrations of Winston Churchill and Anthony Eden. As of 2017 the title is held by his son, the fourteenth Lord, who succeeded in 1964.
Lords Fairfax of Cameron (1627)[edit]
Arms of the Lords Fairfax of Cameron, also adopted as the arms of Fairfax County, Virginia
- Thomas Fairfax, 1st Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1560–1640)
- Ferdinando Fairfax, 2nd Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1584–1648)
- Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1612–1671)
- Henry Fairfax, 4th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1631–1688)
- Thomas Fairfax, 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1657–1710)
- Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1692–1781)
- Robert Fairfax, 7th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1707–1793)
- Bryan Fairfax, 8th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1736–1802)
- Thomas Fairfax, 9th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1762–1846)
- Charles Snowden Fairfax, 10th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1829–1869)
- John Contee Fairfax, 11th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1830–1900)
- Albert Kirby Fairfax, 12th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1870–1939)
- Thomas Brian McKelvie Fairfax, 13th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1923–1964)
- Nicholas John Albert Fairfax, 14th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (b. 1956)
The heir apparent is the present holder’s son the Hon. Edward Nicholas Thomas Fairfax, (b. 1984).
James Rosamond
his father
→
Sarah Wilson Rosamond
his mother
→
Thomas Wilson
her father
→
Jane Lee
his mother
→
Sir Thomas Lee, 1st Baronet
her father
→
Elizabeth Ingoldsby
his mother
→
Mary Bennett
her mother
→
Sir Thomas Bennet, Lord Mayor of London
her father
→
Ann Bennet
his mother
→
Ann Molyns
her mother
→
Sir Alexander Culpeper, Kt.
her father
→
Sir John Culpepper, Kt., of Bayhall, Hardreshull & Bedgebury
Jane Lee
Gender:
Female
Birth:
November 07, 1672
Edinburgh, Midlothian, , Scotland
Death:
1746 (73)
Augusta, Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Sir Thomas Lee, 1st Baronet and Anne Lee
Wife of Robert Wilson, Sr
Mother of Matthew Willson; Thomas Wilson; John Burgess Wilson; Janet Willson; Robert Willson and 4 others
Sister of Elizabeth Beke and Sir Thomas Lee, 2nd Baronet
Added by:
Kevin Brees on September 10, 2008
Managed by:
Bjørn P. Brox and 8 others
Thomas Lee, of Hartwell, Bart., K.B. MP
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1635
Death:
1695 (60)
Hartwell, Northamptonshire, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Thomas Lee, of Hartwell and Elizabeth Ingoldsby
Husband of Anne Lee
Father of Elizabeth Beke; Jane Lee and Sir Thomas Lee, 2nd Baronet
Half brother of Jane Ingoldsby and Richard Ingoldsby
Added by:
Kevin Brees on September 10, 2008
Managed by:
Jimmy Dale Rosamond and 5 others
Curated by:
Erica Howton
Thomas Lee, of Hartwell MP
Gender:
Male
Birth:
between 1607 and 1609
Death:
September 01, 1643 (34-36)
Hartwell, Buckinghamshire, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Thomas Lee, of Morton and Hartwell and Jane Lee
Husband of Mary Lee and Elizabeth Ingoldsby
Father of Sir Thomas Lee, 1st Baronet
Added by:
Roger Gale Skildum on February 11, 2009
Managed by:
Roger Gale Skildum and Erica Howton
Curated by:
Erica Howton
Thomas Lee, of Morton and Hartwell
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1573
Death:
1641 (67)
Immediate Family:
Son of Sir Thomas Lee, Knt., of East Clayton and Morton and Eleanor Lee
Husband of Jane Lee
Father of Thomas Lee, of Hartwell
Added by:
Erica Howton on March 6, 2018
Managed by:
Erica Howton
Sir Thomas Lee, Knt., of East Clayton and Morton
Gender:
Male
Birth:
estimated between 1516 and 1572
Death:
1626
Immediate Family:
Husband of Eleanor Lee
Father of Thomas Lee, of Morton and Hartwell
Added by:
Erica Howton on March 7, 2018
Managed by:
Erica Howton
Sir Thomas Lee, of Moreton, Knt. who in November, 1570, married Eleanor, the daughter, and at length heiress, of Michael Hampden, of Hartwell, Esq. They had 24 children according to her epitaph.
His son and heir was Thomas Lee, Esq. who married Jane, daughter of Sir George Throckmorton.
pedigree
From page 165 of The Baronetage of England: Or The History of the English Baronets …, Volume 2 By William Betham
130. LEE, of Hartwell, Buckinghamshire. Created Baronet, August 16, 1660.
THIS family had flourished long in this county previous to their advancement to the dignity of a Baronet. In a genealogical account drawn up by Browne Willis, it is stated that they are a branch of the Leghs, of High Legh, and Lyme, in Cheshire; and that their immediate ancestor, retiring out of the way of the persecution which that family underwent for taking part with Rich. II. against his usurping successor, settled in Buckinghamshire, early in Henry the Fourth’s reign. Their seat was at Moreton, in the parish of Dinton, adjoining to Hartwell ; and one of the oldest monuments in Dinton church is of William Lee, Esq. and Ann, his wife, which William deceased 9th of October 1486 *. . . They possess Hartwell, by descent, through the families of Hampden, Singleton, Stokes, and Luton, from Alice, daughter and heiress of William Hartwell, of Hartwell, Esq. grandson to Barnabas de Hartwell, to whom this manor had been granted by the crown, early in the 13th century. They resided for five generations and upwards in Moreton, where the ruins of their seat, surrounded by a moat, are still visible.
I, William Lee, aforesaid, who died in October 1486, left issue by Anne, his wife, a son and heir.
2, John t, who died in London, in March 1503, leaving issue by his wife Alice; a son,
3, Francis, who was father of
4, Thomas Lee, of Moreton, and also of East Claydon, in this county, which Thomas by his wife, daughter of Yates, Esq. had issue,
5, Sir Thomas Lee, of Moreton, Knt. who in November, 1570, married Fleanor, the daughter, and at length heiress, of Michael Hampden, of Hartwell, Esq.
origins
From page 96 of Aedes Hartwellianae: Or, Notices of the Manor and Mansion of Hartwell, Volume 1 By William Henry Smyth
“To return to the Lees. Hitherto the course of this family’s descent has been based on a chain of positive facts; but, before we trace the consanguinity marked by heraldic bearings, some degree of inferential testimony must be admitted. This very numerous family is to be distinctly followed in our early > archives as that of Domesday, the Inquisitions, Valuations, Rotuli, and the curious record of royal rights intituled the Testa de Neville; from all of which excerpta have been made and compared. As before stated, the Leghs or Lees were all-powerful in .Cheshire, as those of High Lee, of Lyme, of Ridge, of Begulegh, of Adlington, of Twemlow, and of Booths; but the branching off of the several casts into other counties, was under circumstances the particulars of which are now, perhaps, unattainable. Yet there is evidence that the Lees of Morton withdrew into Buckinghamshire in the early part of Henry the Fourth’s reign, to avoid the persecution to which they were liable in consequence of their manifested attachment to the cause of the unhappy Richard the Second ….”
Walter Culpeper (Colepeper), Esq.
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1402
Bayhall,Pembury,Kent,England
Death:
November 24, 1462 (56-64)
Goudhurst,Cranbrook,Kent,England
Place of Burial:
Bedgebury Chapel of St. Mary’s Church, Goudhurst, co. Kent, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Sir Thomas de Culpeper, of Hardreshull and Bayhall; Joyce Vyne and Joyce Baynard
Husband of Agnes Roper and Agnes Ann Culpeper
Father of Sir John Culpepper, Kt., of Bayhall, Hardreshull & Bedgebury; Margaret Culpeper; Elizabeth Culpeper; Nicholas Culpeper and Richard Culpepper
Brother of Nicholas Culpeper and Thomas Colpepper
Half brother of John Culpepper, MP; Eleanore de Culpepper; Jocosa Hailsham; Richard Culpepper and Joyce Baynard
Added by:
Reverend Benjamin Charles Govier on August 24, 2007
Managed by:
S Marie Hope and 32 others
Thomas of Bayhall, Hardreshull & Exton de Culpeper (Colepeper), Sr. MP
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1360
Hardreshull, Bayhall, England
Death:
March 08, 1429 (65-73)
Bayhall, Pembury, Kent, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Sir John Culpeper of Hardreshull and Bayhall and Elizabeth de Culpeper
Husband of Joyce Baynard; Alianora Greene and Joyce Vyne
Father of Walter Culpeper; John Culpepper, MP; Eleanore de Culpepper; Jocosa Hailsham; Richard Culpepper and 2 others
Added by:
Reverend Benjamin Charles Govier on August 24, 2007
Managed by:
Clay Lancaster and 28 others
Curated by:
Marsha Gail Veazey
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/white-house-we-canceled-bolton’s-interview-with-cnn-after-networks-acosta-disrespected-trump/ar-AAA4V9Q?ocid=spartandhp
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Cazalet
Promoting military ties with America[edit]
Cazalet also termed himself “a booster for America,” and had publicly expressed the gratitude of British citizens for the aid that America gave Britain before and after World War II began.[8] In 1940 he wanted Britain to give the U.S. a free port in the West Indies, with all sovereign rights, in order that the U.S. Navy could have a port closer to South America.[9]
He also hoped that the U.S. and British navies would join together after the war so that their navies could “pool their policies and ideas,” he said.[9] It was an opinion he expressed going back to the disputes at the 1927 Geneva Naval Conference, and which he continued during the revival of those efforts which led to the London Naval Treaty in 1930.[10] He feared that a failure of Great Britain and the United States to reach an agreement among themselves, regardless of the other countries involved, would lead to a dangerous competition in shipbuilding between their two countries which would seriously jeopardize world peace.[11] “Each country should build the ships it needs without regarding the other navy as a possible enemy,” he said.[12]
A year and a half after the war in Europe had begun and after the German bombing of London had continued, Cazalet urged the American government to keep the life line between their countries open. “The victory can be won,” he emphasized, “if the stuff gets over.”[13] He added that Britain was deeply grateful for the help they had already received from the U.S.
Joyce Culpeper1 
| Father* | Sir Richard Culpeper of Oxen Hoath (s 1428 – 4 Oct 1484) |
| Mother* | Isabel Worsley (s 1460 – 18 Apr 1527) |
| Name-AltSpell | This surname is sometimes spelled Culpepper. | |
| Name-AltSpell | This surname is sometimes spelled Colepeper. | |
| Name-Comm | Her was commonly known as Jocosa. | |
| Birth* | 1480 | Joyce was born in 1480. |
| Married Name | say 1496 | As of say 1496, her married name was Legh. |
| Marriage* | say 1496 | She married Ralph Legh say 1496. |
| Birth of Son | after 1496 | Her son John Leigh was born after 1496 at England. |
| Birth of Son | after 1496 | Her son Ralph Leigh was born after 1496 at England. |
| Married Name | say 1515 | As of say 1515, her married name was Howard. |
| Marriage | say 1515 | She married Edmund Lord Howard of Flodden Field say 1515. |
| Birth of Son | after 1515 | Her son George Howard was born after 1515 at England. |
| Birth of Son | after 1515 | Her son Henry Howard was born after 1515 at England. |
| Birth of Son | after 1515 | Her son Charles Howard was born after 1515 at England. |
| Death* | after 1525 | She died after 1525. |
| Biography* | From Joyce’s first marriage came Isabel Leigh, born abt. 1495, who married Sir Edward Baynton, one of the largest landowners in Wiltshire. Their son Henry Baynton married Anne Cavendish, whose father, Sir William, was the ancestor of the Cavendish family, Dukes of Devonshire. This was through his marriage to Bess of Hardwick. Henry Baynton and Anne Cavendish had four sons, the fourth of which, Ferdinand born 1566, married Jane Weare and produced Anne Baynton, born 1602. Anne Baynton married Christopher Batt, gent., of Wiltshire and they emigrated to Massachusetts in 1638, where he became a prominent merchant in Boston. From them came many New England descendants. |
Family 1 |
Ralph Legh (say 1474 – ) | |
| Marriage* | say 1496 | She married Ralph Legh say 1496. |
| Children |
|
|
Family 2 |
Edmund Lord Howard of Flodden Field (say 1483 – 1539) | |
| Marriage | say 1515 | She married Edmund Lord Howard of Flodden Field say 1515. |
| Children |
|
|
| Charts | Catherine Howard (Fifth Queen of Henry VIII): Culpeper Ancestral Chart |
| Last Edited | 9 Nov 2010 |
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